Paper List
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A Unified Variational Principle for Branching Transport Networks: Wave Impedance, Viscous Flow, and Tissue Metabolism
This paper solves the core problem of predicting the empirically observed branching exponent (α≈2.7) in mammalian arterial trees, which neither Murray...
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Household Bubbling Strategies for Epidemic Control and Social Connectivity
This paper addresses the core challenge of designing household merging (social bubble) strategies that effectively control epidemic risk while maximiz...
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Empowering Chemical Structures with Biological Insights for Scalable Phenotypic Virtual Screening
This paper addresses the core challenge of bridging the gap between scalable chemical structure screening and biologically informative but resource-in...
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A mechanical bifurcation constrains the evolution of cell sheet folding in the family Volvocaceae
This paper addresses the core problem of why there is an evolutionary gap in species with intermediate cell numbers (e.g., 256 cells) in Volvocaceae, ...
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Bayesian Inference in Epidemic Modelling: A Beginner’s Guide Illustrated with the SIR Model
This guide addresses the core challenge of estimating uncertain epidemiological parameters (like transmission and recovery rates) from noisy, real-wor...
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Geometric framework for biological evolution
This paper addresses the fundamental challenge of developing a coordinate-independent, geometric description of evolutionary dynamics that bridges gen...
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A multiscale discrete-to-continuum framework for structured population models
This paper addresses the core challenge of systematically deriving uniformly valid continuum approximations from discrete structured population models...
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Whole slide and microscopy image analysis with QuPath and OMERO
使QuPath能够直接分析存储在OMERO服务器中的图像而无需下载整个数据集,克服了大规模研究的本地存储限制。
Countershading coloration in blue shark skin emerges from hierarchically organized and spatially tuned photonic architectures inside skin denticles
City University of Hong Kong | Max Planck Institute of Colloids and Interfaces | University of Salzburg | B CUBE – Center for Molecular Bioengineering | Elasmobranch Research Belgium (ERB) | Medical University Innsbruck | AZTI, Basque Research and Technology Alliance (BRTA) | Hong Kong Polytechnic University
30秒速读
IN SHORT: This paper solves the core problem of how blue sharks achieve their striking dorsoventral countershading camouflage, revealing that coloration originates not from dermal pigments but from hierarchical photonic architectures within individual skin denticles.
核心创新
- Biology Identifies denticles as the primary optical units ('pixels') for shark skin coloration, overturning the assumption that coloration originates from underlying dermal chromatophores.
- Methodology Establishes a multi-scale correlative imaging pipeline (optical, μCT, histology, FIB-SEM, TEM) to link nanoscale crystal organization with macroscopic color gradients.
- Biology Demonstrates a spatial gradient in photonic architecture: from ordered purine-crystal stacks (blue) to disordered assemblies (white), coupled with systematic changes in chromatophore composition and pulp cavity volume (25% in blue zone vs. 17% in white zone).
主要结论
- Blue shark countershading originates from denticle-embedded photonic architectures, not dermal pigments, with pulp cavity volume decreasing from 25% (blue) to 17% (white).
- Color variation is organized hierarchically: at the microscale, blue denticles contain a tessellated reflector-absorber system (iridophores + melanophores), while white denticles lack melanophores entirely.
- At the nanoscale, ordered purine-crystal stacks (~10-60 nm features) generate narrowband blue reflection, whereas disordered assemblies produce broadband white scattering, directly linking crystal organization to optical output.
摘要: The blue shark (Prionace glauca) exhibits a striking dorsoventral color gradient, transitioning from vibrant blue dorsally to silver and white ventrally—a pattern widely interpreted as pelagic countershading. Despite its ecological significance, the physical basis of this coloration remains unresolved. Here we show that this color system does not arise from dermal chromatophores, as in most vertebrates, but from a previously unrecognised photonic architecture housed within the pulp cavity of individual dermal denticles that cover the skin. Optical imaging reveals discrete color domains within denticle crowns, while external denticle morphology remains similar across color zones. Using spectroscopy, micro-computed tomography, histology and correlative electron microscopy, we demonstrate that color variation is organized across coupled micro- and nanoscale architectures. In blue denticles, iridophores and melanophores form a densely packed tessellated reflector–absorber system within an expanded crown-restricted pulp cavity. Transition-zone denticles exhibit partial cellular layering, whereas white denticles lack melanophores and contain only reflective cells. At the nanoscale, ordered purine-crystal stacks generate narrowband blue reflection, whereas disordered assemblies produce broadband white scattering. Together, these results reveal denticles as mechanically protected optical “pixels” whose hierarchical cellular and nanocrystal organization generates the shark’s countershaded coloration.